Light-guided surface plasmonic bubble movement via contact line de-pinning by in-situ deposited plasmonic nanoparticle heating.

ACS applied materials & interfaces(2019)

Cited 20|Views12
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Abstract
Precise spatio-temporal control of surface bubble movement can benefit a wide range of applications like high-throughput drug screening, combinatorial material development, microfluidic logic, colloidal and molecular assembly, etc. In this work, we demonstrate that surface bubbles on a solid surface are directed by a laser to move at high speeds (> 1.8 mm/s), and we elucidate the mechanism to be the de-pinning of the three-phase contact line (TPCL) by rapid plasmonic heating of nanoparticles (NPs) deposited in-situ during bubble movement. Based on our observations, we deduce a stick-slip mechanism based on asymmetric fore-aft plasmonic heating: local evaporation at the front TPCL due to plasmonic heating de-pins and extends the front TPCL, followed by the advancement of the trailing TPCL to resume a spherical bubble shape to minimize surface energy. The continuous TPCL drying during bubble movement also enables well-defined contact line deposition of NP clusters along the moving path. Our finding is beneficial to various microfluidics and pattern writing applications.
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Key words
nanoparticles,plasmonic heating,microbubbles,pulsed laser,stick-slip motion
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